“Mischa Ruspine,” the Saint read, and failed to fit either the name or the face into his private rogues gallery. “Mischa Ruspine of euphonious name, how do you fit into this Bald Mountain lawn-fête?”
Mischa, instead of answering, gave every indication of having sacked out for the night. Simon left him to go to the metal box that the other had flung to the ground in his moment of sudden terror. It had landed upside down and open. When the Saint lifted it, a single thin packet wrapped in oilcloth fell to the cement. There was nothing else in the container — not even a dust-particle of the chemical constituents of one Josef Meier whom the box’s name-plate advertised as resting therein.
Before the Saint could unfold the oilcloth, however, there were new signs of life from Vicky Kinian. She took several quick breaths, gave a little cry, and tried to sit up. Then she saw Simon’s face clearly in the moonlight.
“You!”
“Well, good evening,” he said soothingly. “Don’t look so scared. I’m not the guy who mugged you.”
She answered groggily.
“I... guess you weren’t. I saw him...” She suddenly was frightened. “Is he—”
“He’s still with us,” Simon told her, “but he’s had a visit from the Sandman and is now relaxing in relative peace. His name is Mischa Ruspine. Do you know him?”
With a helping arm from the Saint, Vicky sat up, propping herself with one hand.
“No,” she said. “Who is he?”
“I haven’t the faintest idea, except that he hails from Moscow. You’re lucky to be alive, you know, playing around in dark places with characters like him. You must be more lucky than clever.”
As dazed as she was, she managed to put some fire into her voice.
“And you’re the most aggravating man I’ve ever had butting into my business. I’d be a lot luckier if I’d never seen you!”
“Oh, I wouldn’t say that,” Simon returned calmly. “If I hadn’t surprised Mischa while he was glomming on to this, you might have been short one clue in your treasure hunt. Or is this the summum bonum we’ve all been cracking heads to get at?”
He held up the thin package that had fallen from the metal box.
“You give me that!” cried the girl.
Simon held it out of her reach, and when she tried to get to her feet dizziness overcame her and he had to help her back to the ground again.
“Easy, now,” he said. “Wait till you’re a bit stronger before you start getting rambunctious.”
“You’ll steal it,” she mumbled.
“So will you if I let you,” said Simon. “We can discuss ethics in a better place than this, though. Take a few deep breaths and let’s get out of here, as they say at least once in every television show.”
While she recovered from her vertigo he reached for the metal box which had held the oilcloth packet and made sure there was nothing else in it, nor any markings in its interior. Then he closed the lid and put the little casket reverently back in its place on the shrine’s upper shelf.
“Alas, poor Josef! I never knew him well, and I suspect he was strictly an imaginary refugee. It would’ve been no problem to get permission to add another urn to the collection here.”
“What is it?” Vicky asked anxiously. “What’s in the package?”
“Something very light,” Simon informed her carelessly. “And knowing your father, probably something absolutely useless, like an envelope full of coded nursery rhymes giving complete instructions for finding the Matterhorn.”
“I don’t think that’s funny.”
“I do,” Simon said unblushingly. “Let’s see just what dear old dad really is up to next — back at the hotel. I’d like to get moving before Mischa wakes up or somebody else comes along.”
He helped her to her feet and supported her at his side as they walked slowly back to the cemetery gate and his car.
Behind them, glasses glinting in the pale light of the moon, a short rotund figure stepped cautiously from a group of trees, and a plump hand switched off the electrical current of a kind of hearing device.
The man with the Vandyke beard walked from his hiding place to the monument to German refugees. Out at the cemetery’s boundary he heard a car engine start and move away through four gears. He could move and talk freely now. He went over to Mischa Ruspine and prodded him with the toe of a well-polished shoe. Mischa grunted and lay still. The man with the white beard kicked him in the waist several times with increasing impatience.
Finally Mischa revived sufficiently to realize where he was and to remember what had happened. When he saw the formidable broad figure of his superior standing over him he at once began to make excuses.
“It was not my fault, Comrade Uzdanov! I had the box and he took me from behind.”
“He was not behind you when he hit you,” Comrade Uzdanov corrected him. “I saw it!”
Mischa was kneeling, holding his bowed head in both hands. Uzdanov moved slightly behind him.
“I will make up for it as soon as I can find him again,” Mischa said.
“There will be no need for that,” Uzdanov said kindly.
His words veiled the fact that he was very quietly twisting the crooked handle of his walking stick and pulling it from the main section of the cane. If Mischa had not been so busy trying to still the throbbing in his head he might have looked around and seen the short slender shaft of steel which projected from the detached handle, glinting frostily in the pallid light.
Uzdanov placed a reassuring hand on Mischa’s shoulder from behind.
“There will be no need,” he repeated. “You are now only a man who knows too much, Mischa — and I cannot trust one with such a record of failures. So goodbye!”
On the last, word he plunged the sharp steel spike deeply between Mischa’s shoulders. A moment later he withdrew the stiletto from his co-worker’s body and left him lying where he slumped. Then, on second thought, he turned and wiped the blade clean on the tail of Mischa’s jacket before replacing it in the cane and locking the sections solidly back into place.
All things neatly attended to, Uzdanov turned on his heel and walked rapidly out of the cemetery whose population he had just increased by one. He was ready to stop listening and watching now. The time had come for action.
4
“I don’t know whether to thank you or call you a rat,” Vicky Kinian said sulkily.
She was huddled in the front passenger seat of the Saint’s rented Volkswagen pouting like a disobedient little girl being whisked home by her father from the school principal’s office. During most of the drive from the Cimetière Internationale she had kept quiet, nursing her hurt pride and throbbing head. As they came to the light-fringed boulevards that bordered Lac Leman she finally gave her vocal facilities a real test and found they were still in fair working order despite the ungentle massage Mischa Ruspine had given her larynx in the graveyard.
“I think you’re horrible for following me and poking into my business,” she opined. “Even though I suppose you might’ve saved my life.”
“I suppose the deed was worth just about that much adulation,” Simon replied cheerfully. “After all, there are lots of American girl tourists in the world; one certainly wouldn’t be missed. Maybe I should just take you back to the cemetery.”
Vicky sat up as if a loose spring had penetrated her seat cushion.
“No!”
“Then try to show a little proper reverence for your mental superiors. Remember, I warned you back in Lisbon that you’d find the going rough on your own.”